Dear Friends,
Since 1925, the Church has celebrated the feast of Christ
the King. It was a feast that was created for the times and spoke to the times,
and it still does if we try to learn what this kingship of Jesus really is. It
does not give him airs. It does not keep him at a distance from the
people. He is close to us, our savior. That
is who he is and who he is for us: Our Savior. If we are honest, we know that we
cannot save ourselves. In our day, we like to think we can, but we really
can’t. Our salvation depends completely on God, who wants us, loves us, draws
us close. God does for us what he did for Jesus. God traveled the roads with
Jesus, was his inspiration, confidant, uncompromising source of uncompromising
strength. The Father of Jesus never failed Him, even when Jesus’ own strength failed and he came close to death.
In his life, Jesus had no kingly aspirations. Instead, he
was a realist who met people where they were and when possible, helped them
move on toward a new and better way of living. Of the many important things we
can call to mind about Jesus on this feast day, two seem particularly important
for us to recognize and make our own in practice.
Jesus was available to
others. As He traveled through
Galilee and eventually into Judea Jesus was available to people who noticed him and
those who did not. The Widow of Naim,
for example, didn’t see him, so absorbed was she in her grief, but, Jesus
noticed her, and dealt with her sorrow in the most remarkable way.
Jesus was available to people who didn’t want what he had to
offer, like the young man who went away sad because he was wealthy and couldn’t
bear to let go of his wealth. In this case, Jesus did not succeed.
Traveling through Ireland in October, our coach driver/guide
was candid when we asked him about his life in Ireland. He told us just how
things worked out and then he invariably added: “I did the best I could.” That was what Jesus did – the best he could when
people accepted him or when people chose to diminish his word, his gifts of
teaching and healing.
Jesus made no claim to be a celebrity, an important person
among kingmakers who felt they had a right to judge people’s
importance. Jesus was one-with-God and one-with-us.
How, then, do we do what Jesus did? How do we become
available to people and do all we can for them and with them? How do we acquire
the tenderness of Jesus, the fearlessness of Jesus, the compassion of Jesus
toward all who suffer? How do we do the best we can with God the Father as out
guide?
This feast offers us a time to turn to Jesus and offer him
our hearts, our daily living, our hopefulness and realization that we can only
do what we can. This is a very different way of looking at this King of ours.
-Sister Joan Sobala
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